RIP: Ira Sandperl…

Ira Sandperl, a pacifist and self-styled Gandhian scholar who mentored folksinger Joan Baez, was a political ally of Rev. Martin Luther King, became the first employee of the renowned Kepler’s Bookstore, and introduced a generation of draft-age men to nonviolence during the Vietnam War, died on April 13 at his home in Menlo Park, Calif. He was 90 years old.

An ardent follower of the principles of Mahatma Gandhi from the late 1940s, Mr. Sandperl met Ms. Baez at a Quaker meeting in Palo Alto in 1959 when she was a senior in high school. The two developed a deep bond and shared a number of political causes. In 1965, Mr. Sandperl helped Ms. Baez found The Institute for the Study of Nonviolence in Carmel Valley, California and became its first president. The organization had a lasting influence on both the civil rights and antiwar movement into the mid-1970s. For a period, Dr. King would send members of his organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), to the Institute for training in nonviolent organizing tactics.

“I began accompanying Ira to places where he spoke,” Ms. Baez wrote in her autobiogrpahy, Daybreak. “I heard more about Gandhi, love and nonviolence and a brotherhood of man, which he said didn’t exist yet.”

In 1966, Mr. Sandperl accompanied Ms. Baez to Grenada, Mississippi, where they joined Dr. King in a campaign to help desegregate local schools. Two years later, in January 1968, Dr. King visited Mr. Sandperl and Ms. Baez in Santa Rita prison, where the two were serving 45 day sentences for sitting in at the Oakland, CA draft induction center. Dr. King said he made the visit “because they helped me so much in the South.”

Mr. Sandperl also joined Ms. Baez in the Free Speech Movement sit-ins at the University of California at Berkeley during the student occupation of the administration building in 1964.

Mr. Sandperl became a national figure during the antiwar movement of the 1960s, speaking and organizing nonviolent opposition to the war. “Ira was the opening chapter,” said David Harris, who came to Stanford University in 1963 and first heard Mr. Sandperl in his freshman dormitory. Mr. Harris became Stanford student body president in 1966, later married Ms Baez, and gained national attention when he went to jail for refusing induction in 1969. Mr. Harris, Ms. Baez and Mr. Sandperl toured college campuses together campuses in 1968 encouraging draft resistance.

Mr. Sandperl was invited in the Fall of 1970 along with civil rights leader Rev. Ralph Abernathy to bring the message of nonviolence to Kent State University following the killing of four student protestors by Ohio National Guard in May 1970.

Profiled in an essay by writer Joan Didion in 1967, the Institute for the Study of Nonviolence created local controversy when it first opened in Carmel Valley, but attracted a stream of political novices and veteran activists, as well as celebrities such as folksinger Judy Collins and the Beatles. In her autobiography, Ms. Collins described visiting Ms. Baez and attending a class given by Mr. Sandperl, after which Ms. Baez said: “Here’s where I really belong. The music is just what I do to support the school, right Ira?”

Mr. Sandperl continued to be politically active through the 1990s. During much of 1977-78, he lived with his third wife Molly Black in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, working with the Irish Peace People.

Ira Sandperl was born on March 11, 1923 in Saint Louis, Mo., and raised in a Jewish household by Harry and Ione Sandperl. His father was a surgeon and his mother was a follower of Norman Thomas, leading Mr. Sandperl early on to be exposed to both socialist and pacifist ideals.

He attended Stanford University during the Second World War. He was not drafted because he had contracted polio as a child.

Although he had been exposed to his mother’s pacifist ideas as a child, Mr. Sandperl dated his commitment to the teachings of Gandhi to a happenstance encounter after the Second World War. He was walking past a bookstore when he saw a book with a photo of Gandhi on its cover. He went in, and although he did not have the money to pay for the book, the clerk said, “Well, if you want this book on Gandhi, I know you will come back to pay for it later.” Mr. Sandperl did, and became a self-described “Gandhi scholar.”

In 1955 he was hired as the first employee of Kepler’s Bookstore in Menlo Park, California, where he would work on and off until retiring in 1988. Founded by his friend and WWII conscientious objector Roy Kepler, the bookstore was one of the first of a new genre of bookstores that sold paperbacks. Kepler’s was profiled in the 2012 book Radical Chapters by Michael Doyle. Mr. Sandperl, who was extraordinarily well-read, was a fixture behind the cash register for many decades. He would engage customers on political topics as well as advice on literature that ran the gamut of classics, poetry, fiction and history.

”People would confuse me with Roy,” Mr. Sandperl said in an interview several years ago. “I would be holding forth at the counter while Roy would be sweeping up or cleaning the toilet in the back.”

Among the constant stream of visitors to Kepler’s were visitors like Ken Kesey and future members of the Grateful Dead. Mr. Sandperl recalled being driven to distraction by guitarist Jerry Garcia and his friends, who several years before starting the Dead, were fixtures at the bookstore and would practice endlessly many nights in the coffee house that was part of the store. Mr. Sandperl recalled phoning Mr. Kepler to ask if he could throw them out because he disliked their music, but Mr. Kepler told him they were harmless.

Before starting the Institute, Mr. Sandperl taught at the Peninsula School, an alternative elementary and middle school in Menlo Park. He co-taught the 7th grade class during his first year in 1960 and then taught creative writing until 1965. One of his classes voluntarily met on additional Saturday mornings because he was reading Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” aloud to them and the class was enthralled.

Mr. Sandperl was the author of the book A Little Kinder, published in 1974 with an Introduction by Joan Baez. San Francisco Chronicle columnist Art Hoppe called the book “fascinating and deeply enriching reading ” from “a highly intelligent, extremely well-read, warm, gentle, loving and dedicated human being.”

Mr. Sandperl was married three times, and is survived by two of his former wives: Susan Robinson of Paso Robles, CA., and Molly Black of La Honda, CA; and by two children from his first marriage to Merle Sandperl, Nicole Sandperl, of Aptos, CA, and Mark Sandperl, of Placerville, CA. He also leaves behind several thousand treasured books that encircled him in every room of his home.

Throughout his life Mr. Sandperl was known for his self-deprecating sense of humor and for saying on occasion, “Gandhi, the rat! He ruined my life!”

John Markoff is a lifelong friend of Ira Sandperl’s, a New York Times reporter, and author of the 2005 book What the Dormouse Said.
~~

One Comment

I bought many a book from Ira, and he and Roy Kepler allowed me and my pals Rico and David to sell our mimeographed underground high school magazine Lyceum at Kepler’s in 1966-67. The original store was my father’s home away from home and I…well, I will always remember Ira standing so comfortably behind the counter overseeing his world of books in those bygone days when books were books.

Independent News & Blog Feeds

This Trump Thing, or as it had been known previously for nearly 250 years up until now, The US Presidency. Judge Roy Moore is still running for Senate in Alabama, even after nine women accused him of sexual misconduct, many of whom said they were underage at the time of his actions. One said she […]

The Board of Supervisors breezed through the Tuesday December 5 consent calendar auto-approving the generous auto allowance for a couple of Health and Human Service Director Ann Molgaard’s female management buddies and the two extra hours of paid home inventory leave for all County employees without a peep of curiousity or objection. The Board also […]

It got pretty exciting at the Courthouse last Thursday evening. Wait, strike that! Exciting is too puny a term for the breathtaking exhilaration whistling through the ancient halls of justice. The sense of anticipation was positively electric around the Courthouse Thursday afternoon as all the lawyers arrived and bustled around in their bonaroos, beaming wit […]

If you’ve heard the term “net neutrality,” is it something you imagine only internet fanatics can grasp? Not at all. It simply refers to baseline protection ensuring that no internet service provider can “interfere with or block web traffic, or favor their own services at the expense of smaller rivals.” As such, it is integral to democratic dialogue. […]

On Monday, a group of 21 youth plaintiffs currently suing the federal government over climate change will go before a federal court to argue that their case — which legal experts have classified as a groundbreaking piece of climate litigation — should be allowed to proceed to trial.

The Ecological Land Co-operative (ELC) was set up to address the lack of affordable sites for ecological land-based livelihoods. A life on the land is a dream for many, but one in which the barriers are high, and the ELC recognised that this needed to be addressed.

I’ve been studying Stoicism as a practical philosophy fairly intensely for several years now, and up until recently I accepted what has become received wisdom in the modern Stoicism community about the relationship among three important components of Stoic philosophy:... Read More ›

Time to tackle again the debate that never goes away: how is the Stoic idea that we can work to improve our character, or — which is the same — Epictetus’ contention that some things are up to us and... Read More ›